Nashville Banner from Nashville, Tennessee (2024)

THE NASHVILLE BANNER, SUNDAY, JULY 18, 1937 Probe of U.S. Earhart Hunt Demanded Congressman Challenges Use Of Navy Units Californian Promises Full Investigation of Aid Given by Nation Washington, July 17-4P-Representative Byron Scott (Dem.) California, member of the House Naval Affairs Committee, demanded tonight that the Navy coast guard and Bureau of Air Commerce submit reports on the search for Amelia Earhart--what it cost, and to what extent it interferred with regular duties. Scott sent identical letters to Rear Admiral Adolphus Andrews, chief of the Navy Bureau of Navigation, and Rear Admiral Russell Waesche, coast guard commandant, requesting "informal reports" on the connection of the Navy and coast guard with the Earhart flight, both before it began and after the roundthe yorld, plane was forced down in Simultaneously, he requested Fred fa*gg, director of the Bureau of Air Commerce, to report "on what grounds" Miss Earhart and her navigator, Fred Noonan, were granted permits for the flight. Scott said he planned to offer legislation preventing use of. federal facilities to aid in searching for fliers operating without official missions.

Two Echo Sentiment Representative Charles Faddis (Dem.) of Pennsylvania, of the House Military Affairs Committee, and Representative Ross Collins (Dem.) of Mississippi, of the House Appropriations Committee, echoed Scott's demand for information on the search. Faddis estimated the hunt cost the Government $250,000 per day and added: "If it had been some poor father of a family who 'had been blown off into the Pacific in a fishing boat, do you think the Navy would be spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to hunt for him?" Collins asserted that the Navy search had been "gloomy and disastrous," and contended "it is about time we say that in the future if someone wants to pull a publicity stunt like this, they must do it at their own Having taken this position, the chief efforts of this Government in the immediate future, it was indicated, will be directed toward keeping the United States free from entanglement in any war which may. develop, either in the Far East or elsewhere. Will Force Issue Scott said he wanted the reports submitted to him but warned that he would introduce resolution forcing disclosure of the data if it were not forthcoming. I receive the full and complete reports, I shall lay it before the Naval Affairs Committee for legislative action to curb future publicity flights," Scott said.

In the letter to fa*gg, Scott asked: "Has the department determined, at any time, that nothing would resuit from the flight excepting publicity for her (Miss Earhart) and her backers?" Scott asked. "If the permission were granted, may I inquire as to what result the department thought might come?" Scott, who attacked use of the Navy in the Earhart search July 9 in a House floor speech, asserted that he had received many letters praising his stand. Only two criticized him, he said. One of these, which came from Miami, asserted that he was stifling "youthful courage" and added that the writer was "glad that you are not President." World Scouts Open Jamboree July 31 Amsterdam, July 17-(P) -With 1,000 Boy Scouts from the United States present the world jamboree will be opened July 31 by Queen Wilhelmina of Holland, it was announced today. Some 28,000 scouts from nearly fifty countries will attend the ten-day meeting on a beautiful 200-acre site near the North Sea.

Chief Scout Lord Baden-Powell and Lady Baden Powell are expected to be present. French Asthma Formula Liberal Supply FREE During the World War, the development by a French chemist of formula for overcoming the distress caused by the spasms and paroxysms of asthma, brought such amazing results that Its fame quickly spread all over Europe. Now Introduced in the United States as the Bel-Din Treatment. This amazing preparation acts to overcome gasping, choking and the feeling of suffocation that accompanies asthma. The Bel-Din Company, Dept.

388A, Montrose, are anxious for every sufferer to try this treatment. They will send liberal Free supply to anyone who writes them. Do it today. Adv. High Hog Prices Farmers' Boon, Judge Couples But Housewives' Strike Blocks C.

I. O. Censure Butchers' -Share in Profits With Warning The Banner Congratulates. Mr. and Mrs.

William C. Deck, of Livingston, who recently celfifty-seventh wed. ding anniversary. Court Moves Miners' Trial To Jamestown cuit Judge Brown today Clinton, July 17-(P)-Cir- Cir: dered a habeas corpus hearing for fifteen miners, charged violence around the bound Zenith coal mine, transferred to Jamestown, Tenn, Sheriff Wilfred Smith JamesThe transfer was ordered, when town failed to bring the prisoners into court. The hearing at Jamestown was set for 10 a.

m. Wednesday. The miners are charged with the ambush slaying of Casper H. Woods, manager of the Zenith mine. His death climaxed a series of violent incidents in which two men were slain from ambush and Sheriff Smith, was shot by snipers.

The habeas corpus was entered by attorneys for the defendants, demanding that bond on the accused men be reduced. "All but two of the arrested men are being held in the Jamestown jail which is small and unsanitary," petition said. "The health of these men is endangered." All the defendants are members of the United Mine Workers Union and were employed by the Zenith mine, closed early in the year by a strike. Santa Wilkins Dies at Bruceton July 17-- (Special) -The death of Santa Wilkins, member the Bruceton City Council, occurred unexpectedly Saturday night. Death was due to a heart attack.

Mr. Wilkins had just completed a run on the C. St. L. Railway and was at his home at the time of the attack.

He survived by his two daughters, Misses Virginia' and Martha Rose, of Bruceton; two sons, Lynn of Bruceton, and Roscoe Wilkins of Bowling Green, and. three brothers. Illness of Attorney May Force New Delay In Scottsboro Case Decatur, July 17-(P-Possibility that trials of six Negro defendants in the Scottsboro assault case would be delayed indefinitely was indicated tonight because of the illness of Clarence Watts, assistant defense attorney, Watts was at his home in Huntsville, where he said he would not be able to appear in court for at least two weeks. Judge W. W.

Callahan said he would wait until Monday to decide whether the trials would continue despite Watts' absence. To Make Power Survey Paris, July 17-(Special)Announcement was made today by Edd McClure, president of the Henry County Rural Electrification Association, that a survey will begin at an early date to determine the amount of TVA power that would be used by Henry County farmers. Earl R. Wall, division manager of the TVA, was in Paris today and conferred with Mr. MeClure and County Agent G.

C. Richardson. Saving Handclasp Gunnison, July 17- (P When Floyd Olson, a carpenter on the Taylor Dam project, fell from forty-foot scaffold today, a fellow carpenter, Paul Glover, working below, reached out and caught him. The men shook hands and Olson returned to his job. Babe Drowns in Freezer Findlay July 17- The son of Mr.

and Mrs. Omar Wagner was drowned today when he tumbled into a waterfilled ice crehm freezer, left out in the yard to "sweeten" in the sun. Announcement Miss Alice Bush, the South's leading saleslady of lighting fixtures, is now. in complete charge of our beautiful display. We invite you to take advantage of her eighteen years experience in selecting fixtures for your home.

BRAID ELECTRIC COMPANY 109 11th Avenue, So. Bon Voyage Wished Baptist Delegates QUEEN MARY of Upon the Queen "deck" Mary, of a pride replica of Britain, these three persons heard cheery words of bon voyage from friends in the training union of the First Baptist Church. They sail this month aboard Queen Mary for a tour of Europe and to attend the Baptist World Conference at Zurich, Switzerland. Left to right, Hart, J. E.

Lambdin, and Mrs. Lambdin, director of the Baptist Training Pontiff Defends Mundelein's Attack on Nazis and Fuehrer Castel Gandolfo, July 17-4P-The controversy between the Holy See and the Reich Government over the position of the church in Germany was emphasized today when Pope Pius, addressing a group of Chicago pilgrims, defended the recent criticism of the Nazis by Cardinal Mundelein of Chicago. The Cardinal had referred to Fuehrer Adolf Hitler as "an Austrian paper-hanger and a poor one at that." A furore resulted in Germany. Cardinal Mundelein was bitterly denounced, Germany protested to the Vatican and diplomatic relations cooled, There have been suggestions that the Holy See might issue a "white paper" citing alleged violations by Germany of its concordat with the Vatican. In his remarks to the pilgrims, the Pope praised Cardinal Mundelein's "courageous defense of the church," which was generally regarded as approval of the Cardinal's speech, 80 bitterly resented by Germany.

The Pope, whose health has shown noticeable improvement in the last, week, held a public audience. Turning to twenty-five pilgrims from Chicago, led by Monsignor James Horsburger, the Pontiff said he was glad to see pilgrims coming from such a distant place, "which attests the greatness of your city and also the greatness of your magnificent Cardinal, so courageous in defense of the rights of God and the church and the welfare of the soul." The Pope then addressed several Spanish nuns, telling them he hoped "Spain's tribulations and cares will soon cease." The American: pilgrims: and the Spanish nuns were received in a which included several hundred newlyweds and pilgeneral audience from many' parts of the grims world. The Pope's statement was linked that the Vatican, failwith reports better relations with Nazi ing to Germany, was seeking a better is technically anticlerical, but understanding with France, which has not interfered with religion to any extent. Gas Masks Gratis With Italian Insurance Rome, July 17-4P-A gas mask with every insurance policy was the inducement offered today by the government-controlled National Insurance Institute, the largest organization its kind in the nation. Through newspaper advertisem*nts the institute informed prospective clients that they would get A gas mask valued at 76.70 lire (about $4) as soon as the policy was signed.

This sum will be deducted when the policy expires. The advertisem*nt said: "Millions will now be able to avail themselves of this opportunity of defending themselves and their dear ones against gas in the event of an enemy air-raid." THE WEATHER BUREAU REPORT Weather Bureau report for the 34 hours ending at 7 o'clock last night as follows: Highest temperature, 91 for degrees, the lowest 70. The mean temperature day WAS 80 degrees, or 1 degree above normal. So far this month the excess is 13 degrees. Since January excess in 217 degrees, Amount of precipitation .87 inch, The total for this month to date is 2.24 inches, which is .08 ihch less than the normal.

The total precipitation for the year to date is 32.17 or 3.65 inches more than the normal. Sunrise 4:43. Sunset 7:03. Total sunshine 14 hours, 18 minutes. Barometer (sea level), 1 29.96; 7 p.

30.00. HOURLY TEMPERATURES, JULY 17 12 noon p. THE RIVER The Cumberland River will change but little tonight and Sunday. Observations at m. local standard time, July 17.

Flood fight in Chge R'fall Cumb. Stage Feet 24 hrs. 24 hrs. Burnside, Ky. 50 $3.2 Celina Carthage 40 NASHVILLE 40.5 Eddyville, Ky.

13.6 Clarksville 998 16.1 40.1 Tenn. R. Florence, Chattanooga Johnsonville Ala, A 40.0 83 Data for yesterday, denotes rise: (-) denotes fall. New York, July 17-(P)-Supreme Court Justice Lewis Fawcett an oral attack on the Committee for Industrials Organization today would impose "the limit of sentence" on persons convicted violating his temporary order prohibiting strike demonstrations at the Wheeler shipyards in Brooklyn. The Wheeler and other shipyards in the New York-New Jersey area are being picketed by the Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding Workers, a C.

I. O. affiliate which is demanding recognition and bargaining rights. Yesterday Fawcett sentenced Sidney Sandnes, C. I.

O. organizer, to thirty days in jail for violating the injunction. Informed today that three pickets remained on duty at the plant, he threatened a not only to jail but also to fine other violators "in the amount of loss or injury estimated to have been suffered" by the shipyard. Fawcett alluded to the jurisdictional fight between the A. F.

L. and C. He said "their slogan appears to 'be 'rule or ruin'" and charged that "red propaganda" was being disseminated circles. Asserting that the C. I.

O. did not recognize "the inalienable constitutional rights of citizens to work unmolested" Fawcett said labor unions ought to be forced to incorporate and "answer damages in just such cases as this one." Union leaders organized a mass protest, scheduled for Monday at the Summer City Hall, against police tactics in a clash at the Robins Drydock and Repair Company's plant in Brooklyn. Three policemen and five strike sympathizers were injured in the battle. Piccard Poises For Experimental Altitude Flight Rochester, July 17-(P)- Dr. Jean Piccard, famed scientist, was poised tonight for an expertmental altitude flight in a gondola lifted by a "grape cluster" of eighty rubber balloons.

At Soldiers Field, on the outskirts of Rochester, 150 men awaited the signal to inflate the balloons. Sometime around midnight, on basis of weather forecasts, calm and clear skies should favor a take-off. At Piccard's signal, within a scheduled twenty minutes, eighty pure rubber sounding- balloons will be attached to a battery of hydrogen tanks, inflated and roped to the duraluminum -gondola of the Pleaides. balloons will represent a Delicately, adjusted to float in complete departure from all craft previously used. Aimed at no record, tonight's flight is intended to test the feasibility of multiple balloon flights.

If the trial is successful, Piccard hopes to make a later flight with 2,000 harnessed sounding balloons which he believes capable of carrying him as much as fifteen above the earth. Only a barometer and a rate-ofclimb indicator will be carried aloft on the present flight. A short wave radio will keep Piccard in contact with ground observers. "I plan to go up only two miles," Piccard said, as he checked his equipment. "I hope to control my altitude by cutting loose a few of the balloons at a time.

Three precautions have been taken, Piccard said, to prevent tangling of lines to the eighty balloons, which might carry him to fatal heights or prevent his descent. "Shears will be use to snip the lines," he said. "If that fails, there are small TNT caps attached to each balloon which can be discharged to set the bags free. And if that fails, I carry revolver with which I can puncture the balloons." Worshippers Stage 'Kneel Down' Strike Nogales, Sonora, Mexico, July 1 17 -(P)-Two hundred worshipers gathered tonight for their second "kneel-down" strike in two months after the Federal Government ordered the Nogales Catholic Church seized and closed. The church bell, pealing continuously, informed the countryside that new crisis had arisen in Sonora churches, closed for and three years by government decree reopened only last month.

Internal Revenue Collector Angel Lagarda said he had received orders from Mexico City to "take over the church and close it." 'War-Peace' Poll Of Congress Sought Washington, July 17-4P-The National Council for Prevention of tonight began a of drive to Congress comWar pile war-peace poll designed to place every Senator and Representative on record as to his attitude toward peace measures. A staff of sixty men and women was assigned to interview congressmen to determine sentiment toward such issues as neutrality, reciprocal trade agreements, naval and army appropriations, compulsory military training and currency stabilization. Presidents Roosevelt, Le Brun To Dedicate War Memorial Washington, July 17- (P)- The War Department announced today that President Roosevelt and President Andre Le Brun of France will be the principal speakers at the ceremonies of dedicating the Mont Faucon Memorial to the approximately one million, American who participated In the Meuse- offensive wh'ich ended the World War. President Roosevelt will speak from Washington and his voice will be carried to the participants in the 50-50 Chance Seen of War In Far East Miles W. Vaughn was Far East manager for the United Press from 1924 to 1934 and covered the revolution in China, the Manchurian wars of and the subsequent North China campaign (which led 'up to the present.

warfare in China's northern -Editor's Note. By MILES W. VAUGHN (Copyright, 1937, By United Press) New York, July 17-(P)-The chances of a war between Japan and China tonight appeared to be 50-50. The most hopeful sign for peace was the fact that ten days had passed since sporadic hostilities started between China's Twentyninth Army and Japanese troops conducting night maneuvers outside Peiping and that neither side had yet started a major battle. The most pessimistic sign was the confirmation of reports that the Central Chinese government had moved its own well trained divisions north of.

the Yellow River into territory which Japan long has claimed a "dominant interest." Neither side has shown any public indication that it is retreating from its original position. These positions are: China's Position China: Japan is clearly in the wrong and must accept responsibility for the first skirmishes when Japanese soldiers clashed with units of the Chinese Twenty-ninth Army along the Peiping-Hankow Railway outside China's old northern capital. Japanese troops had no more right in this area "than they would have in the City of Newark, N. Japan has been following a deliberate policy of military and economic aggression in North ment providing for a demilitarized China since 1933 when China, under duress, signed the Ho-Umetsu agree- zone in certain parts of Hopel-the province in Pelping and Tientsen are situated. Japan's Position Japan: The Ho agreement gives the Japanese army the right to hold maneuvers anywhere in the Peiping-Tientsin region.

The Japanese soldiers attacked outside Peiping retired without resisting when they were first fired on by units of the Chinese 29th Army. The 28th Army, long known antiJapanese feeling, had been following a deliberately provocative policy for a month before the clash occurred. Japan and he "sister nation," Manchukuo, because of their geography have a paramount economic interest North China which they must uphold if their peoples are to be prosperous. The development of the situation to date indicates that leaders on both sides really want to avoid war, but that the soldiers in their com-burning with the accumulated hatreds of years--are itching to fight. Chiang Wants Peace Generalissimo Chiang Kaj-Shek and his associates in the Nanking government would like to preserve peace because they fear they might be defeated in war and that all of the fruits of the Kuomintang revolution, which has resulted China nearer national union than at any time in a quarter of a century, thus would be lost.

Japan's leaders are determined to preserve their dominant position in North China but naturally would prefer to do it without an enormously costly war if they can. Loyalists Report Nationalist Plot Against Franco (Copyright, 1937, By United Press) Chicago, July 17-High prices for. hogs on the hoof are a boon to farmers with porkers to sell, but a housewives' strike has kept butchers from sharing in it, a United Press survey showed today. The average retail price of a pound of pork chops in the United States today was around 36 cents, more than 6 cents above the average a year ago and 22.9 cents, approximately, above the depression low. But these high prices for pork chops, and a correspondingly high price range for other choice cuts of pork, mean only small profit to butchers from coast to coast because the housewife with a budget to balance refuses to pay.

Middle Western butchers, according to reports, were faring than those The the East and Far West. In the Deep South the profit per pound was higher but total profit was smaller than during the depression because of the sharply curtailed volume of sales. San Francisco are satisfied a 10 per cent profit even reported a loss on pork sales. Kansas City butchers are making 25 to 30 per cent above wholesale prices, on the average, even with limited buying. In St.

Louis, however, butchers reported profit drop of 20 per cent from 1936, when retail prices were actually below today's price of 28 cents per pound. In Cleveland, butchers reported themselves satisfied if they showed a 12 per cent profit. New Orleans butchers make a 50 per cent profit when pound of pork chops goes to a customer's table today but the total profit is smaller than in 1932 when the profit was 40 per cent on a pound of chops. Atlanta, ported same situation, Since July 1, stockyards throughout the country have reported higher than at any time since 1928, prices, farm population has been the biggest winner. National figures today showed the average high on choicest live hogs during this month was $12.80 per hundredweight with Cleveland and East Buffalo N.

paying the best prices, $13.10 and $13.05, respectively. Next Move Wallace's As Court Validates Wedding to Mae Hollywood, July 17-4P-The next move in the Mae West-Frank Wallace marital tangle tonight was up to the vaudeville hoofer whose marriage to the blond screen actress was validated by California courts. In a surprise action, Miss West's attorneys closed the case by asking Superior Judge Robert W. Kenny to validate the marriage and end the litigation. Wallace's attorneys, who sought to refuse Miss West's contention that she was a "kissless bride," objected but Judge Kenny granted the motion.

That additional litigation was in prospect was admitted by Attorneys Avery M. Blount and Betty Gillette, representing Wallace who married the twenty-six years ago in Milwaukee, Wis. MARION HARP Algood Funeral services for Marion Harp, 67, who died at his home near Algood Friday after a short illness, were held today at the Bear Creek Cemetery, where burial took place. He is survived his wife and ten children, Mrs. Herbert Byers, Mrs.

Isaac West, and Miss Francis Harp, all of Algood, Mrs. John Tyrer of Carthage, and Mrs. Jess Elderidge of Monterey, Erbie Harp of Detroit, Herbert Harp and Boyce Harp, of both of Algood, Raymond Harp Carthage, and Joe Harp of Rickman, and one brother, Frank Harp of Algood. MRS. C.

T. BURTON Liberty Funeral services for Mrs. C. T. Burton, 69, were held Saturday at the Salem Baptist Church, the Rev.

H. D. Burns officiating. Surviving her are one son, Walter L. Burton of Liberty, three daughters, Mrs.

Willie B. Fite, Mrs. Roy Corley and Mrs. Shelia Pugh, all of Liberty. Burial was in Salem Cemetery.

French Composer Dies Paris, July 17-(P Gabriel Pierne, 74, conductor, composer and member of the Academy of Beaux Arts, died today. Miss Scott Wins C. of C. Contest MISS GERALDINE SCOTT Miss Scott of Watertown, was named winner of the first' prize of $25 in the "Trade at contest sponsored in Wilson County by the Lebanon- Chamber of Commerce. Hendaye, French-Spanish Frontier, July 17-(P)-Spanish Loyalists radio stations broadcast report today that a widespread plot against Gen.

Francisco Franco, Insurgentcommander-in-chief, had been discovered. The plot centered chiefly In Seville, Salamanca and Burgos, the broadcast said, asserting hundreds of civilians and military officers had been arrested and many refugees had fled to Gibraltar. The Loyalists asserted that the plotters sought to overthrow the Franco junta in favor of a mixed military-civilian government to seek an agreement with the Loyalists based on the ground of common hatred of foreigners mixing in the Spanish war. Leaders of the plot were arrested, a broadcast from Santander said. Powell Off for Rest To Complete Recovery From Grief Over Jean Toll in Indian Train Disaster Still in Doubt Madras, India, July 17-(P) -The Punjab-Bengal Express WAS derailed fifteen miles from Patna today with large casualties.

Estimates of the killed and injured varied. One apparently reliable estimate said seventy-five dead and seventy-five injured. Late reports from Patna, however, said ninety bodies had been recovered so far. The Exchange Telegraph re280 dead and 250 injured, all Indians. The train, comprising seven coaches, toppled over an embankment and five coaches molished.

The wreck occurred at the wayside station of Bihta, near Dinapore. Relief workers sped to the scene from Patna, It was understood European first and second class passengers escaped uninjured. No New Action Taken Against the Husband Of Child Bride, 13 Clarksville, July 17-(Special) The terwards" chapter in Tennessee's latest child marriage story, will not marred by further legal interference by the mother of thirteenBirdie Lillian Burt, if she accepts the advice of her attorney, W. R. Fain, the lawyer nounced today.

Fined only $25 and costs, a total of $35, Friday by General Sessions Judge Ridley R. Goodpasture, the husband, Mason Burt, twentyseven-year-old farm hand, Friday afternoon left the Courthouse after his fine had been secured, clutching the arm of his young wife of six days, and declared "I'm going to make her a good husband." Burt was charged with fraudulently signing a document setting out that his young bride-to-be was 21 years old. He pleaded guilty, declaring "I love her." It was the first fine under Tennessee's recently enacted statutes against child weddings. Fain said his client, Mrs. Lela Reed, the mother, had not "made up her mind definitely' on whether she would attempt to have the marriage annulled.

He added: "I have advised her against that." The attorney declared had he known "all of the facts" he would not have agreed to prosecute Burt. Finger Man Sought In Wave of Robberies New York, July 17-1P-Police tonight were ordered to look for the "finger man" whose accomplices in the past year have robbed New York society folk of nearly 000 in jewels. Police Commissioner Lewis J. Valentine said he was convinced that similarities in the technique employed in the latest epidemic of jewel robberies were not mere coincidence. "I believe," he said, "that these recent holdups have been staged by a gang that has sprung up." The "finger man," police believe, watches guests at 'night clubs and telephones tips to the gang.

He may be a waiter or a doorman. Wed Recently In Morrison MRS. REMUS BRYAN Mr. and Mrs. George Cunningham announce the marriage of their daughter, Georgiana, to Remus Bryan.

The ceremony was performed Sunday at the Meth. odist parsonage in Morrison, the Rev. N. O. Allen officiating.

Hollywood, July 17- 4P- William Powell, screen actor, packed trip to a debonair, quiet Southern California retreat where he will rest for several days to complete his recovery from illness induced by the shock of Jean Harlow's death. Powell was 3 reported improved today, but his physician was unwilling for him to return to work on his current picture until Wednesday or later. Dr. H. D.

Van Vleet said Powell was suffering from nervous and physical exhaustion. EVERETT ORGATRON ELECTRIC EQUIVALENT OF THE PIPE ORGAN Conforms to all standards and recommendations of the American Guild of Organists. SEE, HEAR AND PLAY THIS MARVELOUS INSTRUMENT M. F. SHEA 242 5th N.

OPPOSITE KRESS' PIANOS RADIOS to ANOTHER SMART USED CAR BUYER "Call it a woman's bargain bunting instinct if you like," says Mrs. V. Duske, housewife, "but when considered investing in a sound used car 1 turned to the classified ads in the paper. I looked particularly for the Dodge dealers' ads, as on several occasions 1 had heard about their wonderful bargains in dependable used cars. Even though I had a certain make and model in mind I had no trouble at all in finding just what I wanted.

That was several months ago, and the more I drive my car and see what other dealers ate asking for models like mine, the more I realize how big bargain 1 got by going to Dodge dealer. TURN TO THE CLASSIFIED DAY'S MONEY-SAVING SPECIALS YOU'LL FIND A CAR OR TRUCK "I know that I saved at least $35 and my car was in an exceptionally fine condition, looking and running like new, and the Dodge dealer was just as anxious to please me as though I were buying a new car. I'm positive that anyone wanting to save money on a good used car can't de better than to go to a Dodge dealer." SEAL LOOK FOR ABILITY YOU DEPEND- DEPENDABLE SECTION OF THIS PAPER FOR TOAT YOUR DODGE DEALER SI TO FIT YOUR POCKETBOOKI ceremonies by a transocean radiotelephone hookup. President Le Brun will be present at the dedication August 1. The ceremonies will mark the dedication of the first of a series of battle monuments erected in honor of American soldiers who fought in the World War, Five miles distant in the Ameri can cemetery at Romagne, where are buried thousands of American soldiers killed in the forty-seven day battle of the Meuse-Argonne.

MONDAY CITY WIDE DOLLAR DAY Read the Dollar Day advertisem*nts in today's Banner -and prepare to take advantage of the many attractive bargains..

Nashville Banner from Nashville, Tennessee (2024)
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